Ron Pinkney


Robert Theron "Ron" Pinkney is an American pioneer broadcaster who was the first African American play by play announcer on a major television network. The game was played at the Memorial Stadium in Jackson, Mississippi between Mississippi Valley State and Jackson State.

Early life

Ron Pinkney was born to Robert Pinkney and Catherine Staton at Freedmans Hospital in Washington, DC on Sunday, May 26, 1935. He was raised in Annapolis, Maryland and attended Stanton Elementary School and graduated from Bates High School in Annapolis. He attended Morgan State University in Baltimore and later the Baltimore School of Engineering.

Journalist and radio career

Pinkney's first journalist job was an Annapolis correspondent for the Baltimore Afro-American newspaper in 1955.
His first broadcasting job was on radio station WANN in Annapolis, MD. He was a Dee Jay at WEBB in Baltimore, MD from 1960–1962.
In 1963, while a deejay in Maryland, he began a career in sportscasting at his alma mater, Bates High School. He hosted two daily sports shows and did play by play at football and basketball games. He did his first college broadcasts at Maryland State and Delaware State University in 1964. Coaching legend Vernon "Skip" McClain's MSU Hawks teams were aired twice on WANN Radio in Annapolis. The Hawks were Black College Football National champions during this era. Pinkney became the Drive Time morning newscaster at WOL, the top rated station in the Washington, DC metropolitan area. He later was promoted to the News Director and employed three other on-air newscasters.
From 1968 to 1970, he was the voice of Morgan State football on WEBB, when the Golden Bears were coached by the legendary head coach Earl Banks, and featured future NFL stars Raymond Chester, CB Mark Washington and prominent alumnus William Rhoden, a track star, and New York Times columnist. The Bears enjoyed a 33-game winning streak from 1967-1970 when Sam Lacy, Afro-American newspapers, sportswriter George Taliaferro, a former star halfback and Big Ten All-American at Indiana, and Ralph Jones were color commentators in the broadcasting booth.

Television years

Pinkney was the first black sportscaster to work a televised broadcast when he covered the famed Orange Blossom Classic, the Black college football spectacular set in Miami, Florida in the Orange Bowl arena. It was a closed circuit television production pitting the host Florida A&M University versus Jacksonville State University, Alabama. The FAMU Rattlers Hall of Fame head coach and then athletic director Alonza "Jake" Gaither handpicked him to work with another popular Atlanta broadcaster, Chico Renfro. The game was piped into the campus of the Florida A&M and Jacksonville State University, Alabama. Pinkney was hired as a weekend sportscaster at WTTG, channel 5 and teamed with Connie Chung, the weekend news anchor and Maury Povich, who anchored the week night sports show. Pinkney hosted a weekly half-hour black news program on Saturday nights from 10:30 pm to 11:00 pm. He later became the weekend sportscaster on the 10:00 pm newscast from 1970-1973.
From 1971-1974, Pinkney was brought in to perform play by play duties for the syndicated Grambling University football games. He worked with the iconic sports information director Collie Nicholson, who masterminded the Tigers rise to national prominence. Grambling football was under the guidance of the legendary Hall of fame coach Eddie Robinson, who went on to become one of the top all-time winningest coaches in all of football. He replaced another famous athlete and actor Fred "The Hammer" Williamson who was the lone announcer in 1970. Pinkney assumed the solo role in the Grambling booth in 1971. In 1972, former Dallas Cowboys runningback Don Perkins was added as a color commentator. Los Angeles sports writer Betty Smith, considered the first woman sideline reporter was brought on board. Grambling football games were seen in ninety-four markets on a one-hour taped delay.
In 1974, Pinkney became the Sports Director of the Mutual Black Network in Washington, DC. He was the play by play voice of the MBN Black College Game of the Week.
The fourteen-game package was a historic first for Black college sports coverage. Joining the broadcast team were former NFL star Roger Brown in 1975 and Tom Gatewood in 1977. The games were aired through 1979. Pinkney was the Sports Director for National Black Network from 1979-1991.
ABC TV broadcast three HBCU games with Pinkney and Don Perkins handling the play by play and color commentary, thus earning Pinkney the distinction of being the first African American play by play announcer on a major television network. That game pitted Mississippi Valley State versus Jackson State in Jackson, Mississippi. Pinkney was selected to head the MBN coverage of the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Canada, and he covered the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles for National Black Network..
In 1978, Pinkney was the color commentator for the CIAA Invitational Tournament held at the Norfolk Scope in Virginia. In 1979, NBC-TV was in the second year of coverage of the Black college historic tournament when he did play by play. It was the first regional television broadcast for the Peacock Network and the CIAA. Joining Pinkney in the broadcast booth were ex-North Carolina Central great and Boston Celtics Hall of Famer Sam Jones. The tournament highlight was Virginia Union's men's victory over Norfolk State. Dave Robbins, a white coach, won his first CIAA title which came at the expense of the Spartans under Hall of Fame coach Lucious Mitchell.
Pinkney finished his fifty-five-year career at Hampton University as the play by play commentator for basketball and football games.
Note: Pinkney was a good luck charm for nearly all of the teams he covered as they claimed at least two conference and/or national championships:
Pinkney retired in 2005 and resides in Hampton, Virginia.

Ledger

New York Urban League Classics: Pinkney covered the first Whitney M. Young Urban League Classic in Yankee Stadium in 1968. It featured Morgan State vs. Grambling State and was carried by WEBB in Baltimore.